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From No-No to ‘Oh, No’ – Paul D. Miller

“Yamamoto has a perfect game thru 1 inning,” I texted my son. We have a running joke. Every time one of my favorite pitchers takes the mound, I immediately count the innings of perfect or no-hit baseball. It never lasts long, but I love to imagine that any moment might be the one when entertainment becomes history. The first innings of a ball game open with infinite possibilities: Anything can happen.

Anything can happen, but baseball is a game of averages and probabilities, and the odds are increasingly favoring pitchers. Batting averages have been declining across the league for a quarter-century, from an average of .270 in 2000 to a paltry .246 today. Oddly, home runs have not declined (1.17 per game in 2000 vs. 1.16 today). What has declined are old-fashioned singles, doubles, and triples. Baseball is becoming a game of strikeouts and dingers.

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